9 Million Californians to Gain Access to IVF Coverage

Recently passed legislation requires many insurers to begin covering IVF in 2025, including for LGBTQ+ people.

Katie Powers
Written byKatie Powers
Photo of an Insurify author
Katie PowersAuto and Life Insurance Editor
  • Licensed auto and home insurance agent

  • 3+ years experience in insurance and personal finance editing

Katie uses her knowledge and expertise as a licensed property and casualty agent in Massachusetts to help readers understand the complexities of insurance shopping.

Featured in

media logomedia logo
Evelyn Pimplaskar
Evelyn PimplaskarEditor-in-Chief, Director of Content
  • 10+ years in insurance and personal finance content

  • 30+ years in media, PR, and content creation

Evelyn leads Insurify’s content team. She’s passionate about creating empowering content to help people transform their financial lives and make sound insurance-buying decisions.

Featured in

media logomedia logomedia logo
MacKenzie Korris
Reviewed byMacKenzie Korris
MacKenzie Korris
MacKenzie KorrisInsurance Copy Editor

MacKenzie Korris is an insurance copy editor with years of experience in print and digital media. He strives to craft actionable, inclusive copy that fosters smart decision-making through reader autonomy. He has a journalism degree from Saint Louis University.

Published October 22, 2024 at 12:00 PM PDT | Reading time: 2 minutes

Advertiser Disclosure

At Insurify, our goal is to help customers compare insurance products and find the best policy for them. We strive to provide open, honest, and unbiased information about the insurance products and services we review. Our hard-working team of data analysts, insurance experts, insurance agents, editors and writers, has put in thousands of hours of research to create the content found on our site.

We do receive compensation when a sale or referral occurs from many of the insurance providers and marketing partners on our site. That may impact which products we display and where they appear on our site. But it does not influence our meticulously researched editorial content, what we write about, or any reviews or recommendations we may make. We do not guarantee favorable reviews or any coverage at all in exchange for compensation.

Insurify partners with top insurance companies to provide a comprehensive comparison experience. However, the insurance experts writing our content operate independently of our partners. Check out reviews from over 3,000 satisfied customers, how we make money, our data methodology, and our editorial standards.

Share

Table of contents

Table of contentsexpand/collapse

As of July 1, 2025, large group health insurance plans and disability insurance policies in California must pay for the diagnosis and treatment of infertility — including paying for in vitro fertilization (IVF) and other infertility treatments. Approximately 9 million Californians will be eligible for IVF care under new legislation.

The legislation will benefit “cancer survivors, unpartnered people, professional women, LGBTQ+ folks, and those lacking the financial means to pay out of pocket,” said the bill’s author, State Sen. Caroline Menjivar, in a statement issued after Gov. Newsom signed the legislation into law Sept. 29.

The bill specifically expands coverage for LGBTQ+ families by revising the definition of infertility to include the “inability to reproduce either as an individual or with their partner without medical intervention.”

What’s changed? Understanding the new legislation

Previously, California law required health insurers and disability insurance policies to cover infertility treatments but specifically excluded IVF treatment.

The new legislation requires insurers to include coverage for a maximum of three egg retrievals — the procedure to extract eggs from the patient’s ovaries for IVF — and unlimited embryo transfers, following the guidelines of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM). The bill doesn’t apply to religious employers but establishes willful violation of the law as a criminal offense.

Previously, California law required insurers to provide infertility treatment per agreed-upon terms communicated to policyholders and group contract holders. Now, the new legislation prevents health insurance companies from establishing different conditions or coverage limitations for fertility and infertility diagnosis, medications, treatment, and services.

In addition to expanding infertility coverage to LGBTQ+ families, it also prohibits health insurers from coverage discrimination based on a person’s “age, ancestry, color, disability, domestic partner status, gender, gender expression, gender identity, genetic information, marital status, national origin, race, religion, sex, or sexual orientation.”

What’s next: California becomes 14th state to back IVF coverage

Twenty-one U.S. states and Washington, D.C., have laws requiring insurance companies to cover some amount of infertility or fertility treatment care, though specific laws vary.

Only 14 states — and Washington, D.C. — specifically require health insurers to cover IVF treatment. These states include Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Utah.

The new legislation applies to new policies or renewals issued on or after July 1, 2025.

Katie Powers
Katie PowersAuto and Life Insurance Editor

Katie Powers is an insurance writer at Insurify with a producer’s license for property and casualty insurance in Massachusetts and expertise in personal finance and auto insurance topics. She strives to help consumers make better financial decisions. Prior to joining Insurify, she completed her undergraduate and graduate degrees at Emerson College. Her work has been published in St. Louis Magazine, the Boston Globe, and elsewhere. Connect with Katie on LinkedIn.

Evelyn Pimplaskar
Edited byEvelyn PimplaskarEditor-in-Chief, Director of Content
Evelyn Pimplaskar
Evelyn PimplaskarEditor-in-Chief, Director of Content
  • 10+ years in insurance and personal finance content

  • 30+ years in media, PR, and content creation

Evelyn leads Insurify’s content team. She’s passionate about creating empowering content to help people transform their financial lives and make sound insurance-buying decisions.

Featured in

media logomedia logomedia logo
MacKenzie Korris
Reviewed byMacKenzie KorrisInsurance Copy Editor
MacKenzie Korris
MacKenzie KorrisInsurance Copy Editor

MacKenzie Korris is an insurance copy editor with years of experience in print and digital media. He strives to craft actionable, inclusive copy that fosters smart decision-making through reader autonomy. He has a journalism degree from Saint Louis University.